The first major
hurricane of the year has come and gone without causing any
significant supply disruptions, leading oil prices to fall back on Tuesday
morning.
- The landfall of Hurricane Beryl led
to three casualties in Texas, leaving more than 2 million Houston homes
without power, but first reports suggest damage to oil infrastructure has
been limited.
- Since making landfall near the coastal town of Matagorda, Beryl has
weakened to a tropical storm and is forecast to move across eastern Texas
and into the lower Mississippi Valley later in the week.
- Freeport LNG went
offline for two
days, the only major export terminals to be shut for Hurricane Beryl,
sending US LNG feedgas demand to 11.1 BCf per day on July 8, down from the
pre-hurricane level of 13.1 BCf per day.
- The port of Corpus Christi reopened Monday afternoon after a three-day
halt in operations, whilst the port of Houston is expected to return to
the status quo ante Wednesday after officials confirm there is no
large-scale material damage.
Market Movers
- US shale producer Devon Energy (NYSE:DVN)
announced it
would purchase the Williston-focused firm Grayson Mill Energy in a
transaction valued at $5 billion, lifting its oil output to 375,000 b/d.
- Italy’s energy major ENI (BIT:ENI) made a hydrocarbon
discovery in Mexico’s Sureste Basin, located in Block 9 and potentially
containing 300-400 MMboe of recoverable reserves.
- UK-based energy major Shell (LON:SHEL) is
seeking the
South African government’s permission to drill up to 5 offshore wells off
the country’s west coast, to the south of its prolific Namibia
discoveries.
Tuesday, July 09, 2024
The oil markets have withstood the first hurricane test of this season,
with oil prices falling back on Tuesday morning. Apart from shipping
delays and platform evacuations, Hurricane Beryl seems to have led to
relatively little physical damage to refineries and offshore platforms,
most probably allowing the markets to focus again on fundamentals and
geopolitics later this week.
Kazakhstan Presents OPEC+ Compensation Plan.
Kazakhstan’s Energy Ministry said that it would compensate for oil
production exceeding its OPEC+ quota according to a new plan that runs all
the way through September 2025,
seeing its
output rise further in June to 7.24 million tonnes.
South Africa’s Power Sector Is Crumbling. South
Africa’s state-controlled power company Eskom is
reportedly set
to publish 2023 figures showing a 15 billion rand ($823 million) annual
loss, mostly stemming from its emergency use of diesel to avoid blackouts
across the country.
US Wind Ambition Unlikely to Reach Target.
According to industry estimates, the US will fall short of the Biden
administration’s 2030 offshore wind target of 30 GW, installing only 14 GW
of capacity by the end of this decade as high interest rates and soaring
material costs hamper development.
Carlos Slim Builds Mexican Offshore Portfolio.
One of the world’s richest men, Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim said his
holding company
signed a $1.2
billion exploration and services deal with state oil firm Pemex to develop
the giant stalled Lakach natural gas project.
Global Temperatures Hit All-Time High in June.
The global temperature average rose to an all-time high of 16.66° C, 0.14°
C above the previous record set in June 2023, with sea surface
temperatures also hitting unseen heights as warmer oceans lead to stronger
hurricanes.
China Reports Giant Gas Discovery. Chinese
state-owned giant Sinopec (SHA:600028)
reported a
giant oil and gas find after exceptional flow rates from its Hai-3
exploration well in the Beibu Gulf of the South China Sea, prompting it to
consider using
an FPSO for the deepwater project.
Oil Majors Share the Emirates’ LNG Dreams. Less
than a month after the UAE’s national oil firm ADNOC took an FID on Ruwais
LNG, it is
rumored that
oil majors Shell, BP, TotalEnergies, and Mitsui have agreed to buy 10%
each in the new 9.6 mtpa capacity liquefaction project.
Japan Power Prices Soar Amidst Scorching Heat.
Day-ahead electricity spot prices in Tokyo have
surged above
¥20 per kWh ($0.12/kWh) this week, the highest since February 2023 as
heatwaves put Japan’s generation to a test, with several gas-fired plants
halted due to unplanned maintenance.
Northern Iraq Is Overflowing with Kurdish Crude.
Just as oil production from Kurdish-controlled territories is nearing
300,000 b/d, output from the Kirkuk region which the federal government controls has
jumped to 360,000 b/d after NOC rehabilitated damaged wells.
Nigeria Declares Emergency to Lift Production.
Nigeria’s national oil company NNPC has
declared a
state of emergency as the country cannot even lift production to its OPEC+
production quota of 1.5 million b/d, obstructed by rampant theft and
pipeline vandalism.
Reformist Wins 2nd Round of Iran Elections.
Former health minister in the Khatami government, reformist candidate
Masoud Pezeshkian won Iran’s presidential election with a 54% result,
promising to revive JCPOA negotiations and
advocating for
foreign investment into Iran’s oil sector.
Canada Seals Off Its Mining Industry from Takeovers.
Having greenlighted Glencore’s takeover of the coal unit of Teck
Resources, Canada’s government
indicated it
would allow large mergers and acquisitions only under the most exceptional
circumstances, worrying investors.
China Back to Buying Saudi Crude Again. Chinese
buyers lifted the lowest volume of Saudi term nominations in June at just
1.12 million b/d and were reported to seek even less in June, however
drastic price cuts from the Saudi national oil firm will lift August
demand to 1.4
million b/d.
By Tom Kool
Editor, Oilprice.com
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